- 5 Results
Lowest price: € 1.25, highest price: € 14.00, average price: € 7.79
1
South : The Last Antarctic Expedition of Shackleton and the Endurance by Ernest Shackleton - Ernest Shackleton
Order
at BetterWorldBooks.com
€ 7.39
OrderSponsored link
Ernest Shackleton:

South : The Last Antarctic Expedition of Shackleton and the Endurance by Ernest Shackleton - used book

ISBN: 9781472907158

In 1911 Roald Amundsen beat Robert Falcon Scott to the South Pole, and Scott and his colleagues all died on the return journey. Ernest Shackleton, who had served with Scott on a previous … More...

used in stock. Shipping costs:zzgl. Versandkosten., plus shipping costs
2
South: The last Antarctic expedition of Shackleton and the Endurance Ernest Shackleton Author
Order
at BarnesandNoble.com
€ 14.00
OrderSponsored link
South: The last Antarctic expedition of Shackleton and the Endurance Ernest Shackleton Author - new book

ISBN: 9781472907158

In 1911 Roald Amundsen beat Robert Falcon Scott to the South Pole, and Scott and his colleagues all died on the return journey. Ernest Shackleton, who had served with Scott on a previous … More...

new in stock. Shipping costs:zzgl. Versandkosten., plus shipping costs
3
South - Ernest Shackleton
Order
at booklooker.de
€ 12.48
Shipment: € 2.901
OrderSponsored link
Ernest Shackleton:
South - Paperback

ISBN: 9781472907158

[ED: Taschenbuch], [PU: ADLARD COLES], Neuware - Ernest Shackleton's own account of his ill-fated attempt to cross Antarctica from sea to sea is a story of courage, endurance, survival an… More...

Shipping costs:Versand nach Deutschland. (EUR 2.90) AHA-BUCH GmbH
4
Order
at alibris.co.uk
€ 1.25
OrderSponsored link
Shackleton, Ernest, Sir, and Fiennes, Ranulph, Sir (Foreword by):
South: The last Antarctic expedition of Shackleton and the Endurance - Paperback

2014, ISBN: 9781472907158

Paperback, Bumps/wear at edges/corners. Marks/scratches to cover. Slight bending at parts of book. Fading/scratches at text blocks. Foxing at text blocks/1st few inner pages. Text good., … More...

Shipping costs:plus shipping costs Hereford, Hay-on-Wye Booksellers
5
Order
at Biblio.co.uk
$ 4.16
(aprox. € 3.82)
Shipment: € 15.881
OrderSponsored link
Shackleton, Ernest:
South (Adlard Coles Maritime Classics) - used book

ISBN: 9781472907158

UsedVeryGood. Excellent Condition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed., 0

Shipping costs: EUR 15.88 Ezekial Books, LLC

1As some platforms do not transmit shipping conditions to us and these may depend on the country of delivery, the purchase price, the weight and size of the item, a possible membership of the platform, a direct delivery by the platform or via a third-party provider (Marketplace), etc., it is possible that the shipping costs indicated by euro-book.co.uk / euro-book.co.uk do not correspond to those of the offering platform.

Bibliographic data of the best matching book

Details of the book
South: The last Antarctic expedition of Shackleton and the Endurance Ernest Shackleton Author

In 1911 Roald Amundsen beat Robert Falcon Scott to the South Pole, and Scott and his colleagues all died on the return journey. Ernest Shackleton, who had served with Scott on a previous expedition, decided that crossing Antarctica from sea to sea was the last great unattempted journey on the continent. His Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914-17 was a failure. But perhaps because it failed, with Shackleton not only surviving but bringing his crew back alive, the expedition became more famous than many of those adventurous voyages that succeeded. After reaching the Weddell Sea off the coast of the Antarctic Peninsula, Shackleton's ship the Endurance became trapped in pack ice and spent 1915 drifting northwards. The Endurance was eventually crushed by the ice and sank, leaving 28 men stranded on the ice. They spent months sheltering from the subzero temperatures as the pack ice continued to drift. Eventually Shackleton accepted they could not rely on rescue and had to help themselves, so he led five men on an 800-mile voyage in an open boat to reach South Georgia, from where he was able to mount a rescue of all of the men he had left behind on the ice. Every one of them survived - a remarkable tribute to his leadership, courage and determination. South is Shackleton's own account of the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. It is a true story of courageous endurance, survival against the odds and an undeterred sense of adventure. This special edition includes detailed maps so that the reader can see just how extraordinary Shackleton's achievement was, and a specially written Foreword by Sir Ranulph Fiennes, introducing the book from an explorer's perspective., It's all so British. Which polar explorer do we all know and revere? Captain Scott. Which polar explorer had a fixation for Naval class distinctions and refused to contemplate the idea of sledge-dog travel, thereby condemning himself and his companions to an icy death? Captain Scott. If we're looking for heroics, we've been looking in the wrong place. Ernest Shackleton has not received a quarter of Scott's plaudits but he is infinitely more deserving. Having got within 100 miles of the South Pole in 1908, pioneering the route up the Beardmore Glacier on to the polar icecap in the process, Shackleton was left to watch Amundsen and Scott slug it out for the big prize. Looking for a different challenge, he set sail for the Antarctic in the Endurance in the summer of 1914 in the hope of making the first trans-Antarctic crossing. The Endurance was crushed in the pack ice and Shackleton successfully led his 27 men to the edge of the ice. From there he made a sea crossing in three open boats to Elephant Island. After several months he realised there was no hope of rescue, so he set sail with four others on a 600-mile crossing to South Georgia. He was eventually shipwrecked on the uninhabited side of the island and forced into making the first-ever winter crossing. Two days later he strolled into the whaling station at Stromness, having been long since given up for dead and proceeded to personally oversee the rescue of those still stranded on Elephant Island. Not a single person in Shackleton's expedition party was lost. South is Shackleton's own account of this expedition. It tries hard--in the way latter-day Edwardians did--to play up the scientific discoveries but there's no disguising this is basically a classic tale of derring-do. As such it's a wonderful, if understated read, with an unexpected poignancy in the epilogue. When Shackleton returned to Europe, the First World War had been going on for two years. The political and psychological map of Britain had changed for ever and many of the returning explorers found it hard to adjust. This book has been reprinted many times since it was first published in 1919. This edition comes with a workman-like introduction from Peter King, who bizzarely manages to refer to Roland Huntford, author of the brilliant definitive biography of Shackleton, as James Huntford. Where it does score, though, is in the assembly of James Hurley's fantastic photographs of the expedition which are liberally sprinkled throughout the text. If the words don't get you, the pictures will. --John Crace

Details of the book - South: The last Antarctic expedition of Shackleton and the Endurance Ernest Shackleton Author


EAN (ISBN-13): 9781472907158
ISBN (ISBN-10): 1472907159
Hardcover
Paperback
Publishing year: 2014
Publisher: Bloomsbury USA Core >1

Book in our database since 2014-04-08T11:46:21+01:00 (London)
Detail page last modified on 2024-03-26T14:47:42+00:00 (London)
ISBN/EAN: 9781472907158

ISBN - alternate spelling:
1-4729-0715-9, 978-1-4729-0715-8
Alternate spelling and related search-keywords:
Book author: shackleton ernest, fiennes ranulph, ernest hello, shackle, ernest cole, robert shackleton
Book title: shackleton, south with endurance, antarctic, expedition, maritime


< to archive...